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Photograph By Cecil Beaton |
King George VI of
England died.
The world watched as early
TV covered
Elizabeth II’s
coronation.
King Farouk of Egypt was
deposed.
Vladimir Putin was born.
Dwight Eisenhower wins presidential
race, defeating
Adlai Stevenson. In
the Have You No Shame Department,
Richard
Nixon used his dog to rehabilitate his tainted reputation.
The “Checkers Speech” worked.
The first artificial heart valve was
produced. The U.S. exploded its first thermonuclear device.
Merce Cunningham formed his dance
troupe. The Pulitzer for fiction went to
The
Caine Mutiny by
Herman Wouk. The
Nobel Prize for literature went to
Francoise
Mauriac. The Academy Award for best picture was won by
American in Paris. Other notable films of the year were
Singin’ In The Rain,
High Noon,
Moulin Rouge and
The Greatest
Show On Earth.
TV’s first morning
show, ”Today,” debuted with
Dave
Garroway at the desk. “The Honeymooners” and “Dragnet” also debuted in 1952.
Top books included
The Invisible Man
by
Ralph Ellison,
The Old Man and the Sea by
Ernest Hemmingway,
The Natural by
Bernard
Malamud and
Wise Blood by
Flannery O’Connor. The radio was
playing “Blue Tango” by
Leroy Anderson,
“Wheel of Fortune’ by
Kay Starr, “Cry”
by
Johnnie Ray “You Belong To Me” by
Jo Stafford and “Auf Wiederseh’n,
Sweetheart” by
Vera Lynn.
Also in 1952, the first Tarzan,
Elmo Lincoln, died.
Eve Peron,
John Dewey and
John Garfield
also passed.
Liam Neeson,
Roseanne
and
Paul Herman Reuben (Pee Wee
Herman) exited their respective wombs.
If you were around, what were you doing this year of the water dragon?
2 comments:
My mother took us to my cousin's house to watch the coronation on TV. We didn't have a TV set yet. Got one the next year.
It was one of the first programs on our first TV. I don't remember clearly, but we may have bought a TV in order to watch the coronation. However my brother and I used to go to our cousins to watch "Lucy" before our Capehart TV arrived.
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